I'm in search of the word that describes the strong referendum that a candidate receives upon a strong election win that grants him or her vast leeway in enacting policy reform. I can't quite get it; referendum is close, but I believe that there's a more specific word for this, perhaps 3-4 syllables and starting with a 'c'.

This question is too basic; it can be definitively and permanently answered by a single link to a standard internet reference source designed specifically to find that type of information.
If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.

1

General Reference. Any competent native speaker would expect the word mandate at the end of the question, and see the glaring misuse of referendum as indicating poor knowledge of English political terminology.
–
FumbleFingersOct 17 '12 at 3:35

2

Sometimes even teenagers (I have no idea how old Matt B. is or whether he's a native speaker of English) have "senior moments" where they forget such obvious and common terms. It used to happen to me all the time. Still does. :-(
–
user21497Oct 17 '12 at 4:35

1

But if the asker doesn't know or doesn't remember the word "mandate", how is he supposed to look it up in a general reference? If he knew the word but had questions about the definition, he could look it up in a dictionary, but the reverse process is much tougher.
–
JayOct 17 '12 at 5:12

2 Answers
2

If a candidate wins in a landslide (by a large margin "a : a great majority of votes for one side; b : an overwhelming victory"), then he or she has what is called a mandate ("an authorization to act: He won the election so convincingly that he believed he had been given a mandate for change.)